NOTE: formatting, etc... are my fault. I'm just doing a copy/paste. Read the original article!

A while ago I thought it would be a good idea to make a backup of my Linux server by just dumping the complete disk to a file. In retrospect, it would have been much easier had I just dumped the individual filesystems.

When I finally got around to using this backup, long after the 10GB disk had perished I realized that to use the loopback device to mount a filesystem it actually needs a filesystem to mount. What I had was a disk image, including partition table and individual partitions. To further complicate matters the data partition was also not the first partition inside this image.

I followed the instructions on http://www.trekweb.com/~jasonb/articles/linux_loopback.html to try and mount the partitions inside the disk image, but ran into two problems.

To mount a partition inside the disk image you need to calculate the offset of where the partition starts. You can use fdisk to show this information to you, but you need to specify the number of cylinders if you are using a disk image.

You then also need to multiply the start and end numbers with the calculated sectors to get a byte offset.

I found another tool more useful for this task, called parted. If you are using Ubuntu, you can install it with ‘apt-get install parted’

Oops, that doesn’t look right. According the article referred to above if you are using a util-linux below v2.12b then you cannot specify an offset higher than 32bits. I’m using util-inux 2.13 which shouldn’t have that problem, and besides, my offset is well below the 32bit limit.

The article also offers an alternative loopback implementation that supports mounting partitions within an image, but that requires patching and recompiling your kernel which I would rather not do.

Instead I decided to extra ct the filesystem from the image which would then allow me to mount it without specifying an offset. Doing this is quite straightforward with ‘dd’. You need to give ‘dd’ a skip count, or, how far into the source to start copying, and a count, how much to copy. Here you can either use the single byte offsets retrieved with parted or divide them by 512 and let ‘dd’ use 512 byte blocks. Copying just one byte at a time takes a very long time, so I suggest using a larger block size.

Here is the command I used to extract my filesystem. Skip is 2313360 (1184440320/512) and Count is 17719695 (9072483840/4)